>So settle in and get comfy.
Your prior sentences, with which I agree, rather imply that we should never settle in and never get comfy.
The complacency and insouciance of the American people are what allowed this disaster to befall us all.
>So settle in and get comfy.
Your prior sentences, with which I agree, rather imply that we should never settle in and never get comfy.
The complacency and insouciance of the American people are what allowed this disaster to befall us all.
>There is nothing odd about the star of David.
That’s where you’re wrong, kiddo. The Star of David is derived from Islam via Kabbalah. Its widespread use as a symbol for Judaic identity dates from the shtetls in Eastern Europe in the 19th century, and from there it became a symbol of Zionism.
Also, the ingrafting of the Gentiles to the People of God (as Paul discusses, particularly in Romans 11) is to an “idealized” Israel - God’s faithful bride. It is to that Israel to which those who are loved on account of the Patriarchs, the covenants, and the promises that the “natural branches” must return and to which they will, in God’s good timing, return, so that all Israel might be saved. “Judaism” (and there are numerous Judaisms today, depending on particular rabbinic lineages) denotes something far removed of the beliefs and practices of the Hebrews. Judaisms are only marginally connected with the Tanakh as a whole - the collection of rabbinic teaching and aphorisms (whose name I do not speak) is predominant. Those who view contemporary Judaism(s) as the elder brothers of those who believe, and place their eternal destiny in, Jesus Christ have never investigated what contemporary Jews (of various strands) actually believe.